At last check, she was batting .556 with five triples, four doubles and 18 RBIs.

"We're strong (Nos.) 1-9," said Panthers second baseman Hannah Ojeda, a senior who will play at N.C. State.

No kidding.

Through 22 games, Plant (19-3) boasted a .425 team batting average, a .483 on-base percentage and had produced 218 runs. Three regulars had .500-plus averages and three more were over .400.

"They come at you in waves," Chamberlain coach Bob Diez said. "They've got a very good lineup."

Not to mention a very disciplined one. Brains and fundamentals have been key to the Panthers' success.

"They've all been coached from an early age," Plant coach Melissa Sigmon said. "They know what they're doing."

That Plant is productive isn't a shock. That it has scored 10 or more runs 13 times and that it has only been blanked once is.

"I definitely knew they had ability," Sigmon said. "But I've been pleased that they're this potent. It hasn't been the same one or two girls, either. It's been all of them."

In 617 at-bats, the Panthers have one homer. They do, however, have 42 doubles and 19 triples, a good sign not only of the team's hitting skill but of its speed.

Plant's offensive success has come vs. bad opponents and good opponents. Against lesser teams, the Panthers have scored in bunches. Against the Chamberlains of the world, they've been able to manufacture runs thanks to timely hitting.

"We've got a little of everything," Collins said. "I definitely would not want to be an opposing pitcher."